Showing posts with label magical. Show all posts
Showing posts with label magical. Show all posts

Wednesday, 30 August 2023

Legends & Lattes by Travis Baldree Book Review

Book Title: Legends & Lattes

Author: Travis Baldree

My Rating: 5*

Publisher: Tor

Publication Date: 22/02/22

Genres: Cosy fantasy, romance, LGBT

Pages: 318

Format read: Ebook

Goodreads: After decades of adventuring, Viv the orc barbarian is finally hanging up her sword for good. Now she sets her sights on a new dream – for she plans to open the first coffee shop in the city of Thune. Even though no one there knows what coffee actually is.

If Viv wants to put the past behind her, she can’t go it alone. And help might arrive from unexpected quarters. Yet old rivals and new stand in the way of success. And Thune’s shady underbelly could make it all too easy for Viv to take up the blade once more.

But the true reward of the uncharted path is the travellers you meet along the way. Whether bound by ancient magic, delicious pastries or a freshly brewed cup, they may become something deeper than Viv ever could have imagined.

Sunday, 7 March 2021

#TsundokuSquad Book of the Month - February - Paris By Starlight (SPOILERS)



Book Title:
Paris By Starlight

Author: Robert Dinsdale

My Rating: 3*

Publisher: Del Rey

Publication Date: 05/11/20

Genre(s): Fantasy, Magical Realism, Romance

Pages: 480

Format Read: Hardback

Goodreads: Every city has its own magic...

Every night on their long journey to Paris from their troubled homeland, Levon’s grandmother has read to them from a very special book. Called The Nocturne, it is a book full of fairy stories and the heroic adventures of their people who generations before chose to live by starlight.

And with every story that Levon’s grandmother tells them in their new home, the desire to live as their ancestors did grows. And that is when the magic begins…

Nobody can explain why nocturnal water dogs start appearing at the heels of every citizen of Paris-by-Starlight like the loyal retainers they once were. There are suddenly night finches in the skies and the city is transforming: the Eiffel Tower lit up by strange ethereal flowers that drink in the light of the moon.

But not everyone in Paris is won over by the spectacle of Paris-by-Starlight. There are always those that fear the other, the unexplained, the strangers in our midst. How long can the magic of night rub up against the ordinariness of day? How long can two worlds occupy the same streets and squares before there is an outright war?